jimswside wrote:is there anyting better than properly(low and slow) cooked pork? I dont think so.
Blown Z wrote:
mhill95149 wrote:
(not my shot)
but the details are:
From a Shabu Shabu restaurant in Tokyo
Bill/SFNM wrote:Pile of Peach Pits on a Plate
Cathy2 wrote:
I'll bet he was preserving those peaches.
Da Beef wrote:
Grilled Italian Sausage Patty w/ capricolla, mortadella and a couple types of salami-all sauteed in butter and topped with melted provolone, sweet peppers, banana peppers, and giardineria served on garlic bread.
Kennyz wrote:Da Beef wrote:Grilled Italian Sausage Patty w/ capricolla, mortadella and a couple types of salami-all sauteed in butter and topped with melted provolone, sweet peppers, banana peppers, and giardineria served on garlic bread.
hell yeah
Da Beef wrote:Grilled Italian Sausage Patty w/ capricolla, mortadella and a couple types of salami-all sauteed in butter and topped with melted provolone, sweet peppers, banana peppers, and giardineria served on a Gonnellas French roll turned garlic bread.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Kennyz wrote:Da Beef wrote:Grilled Italian Sausage Patty w/ capricolla, mortadella and a couple types of salami-all sauteed in butter and topped with melted provolone, sweet peppers, banana peppers, and giardineria served on garlic bread.
hell yeah
I think I experienced a cardiac event just looking at that picture.
=R=
G Wiv wrote:Da Beef wrote:Grilled Italian Sausage Patty w/ capricolla, mortadella and a couple types of salami-all sauteed in butter and topped with melted provolone, sweet peppers, banana peppers, and giardineria served on a Gonnellas French roll turned garlic bread.
Nice, very nice. You made it, right?
brandon_w wrote:Did a direct grill method because I did not have time for low and slow. The meat was a bit chewy and dry.
brandon_w wrote:More practice is needed:
Silas Jayne wrote:These look like stock pictures?
G Wiv wrote:Appears you grilled Saint Louis style ribs, which are trimmed spare ribs. Try baby back/loin back ribs next time out as they are more adaptable to grilling, particularly for the neophyte.
Cheese curd omelet, hummmmm. I am guessing the curds did not melt. Looks pretty, how did it taste?brandon_w wrote:More practice is needed:
Only way to get to Carnegie Hall.
Silas Jayne wrote:These look like stock pictures? I wanna see what everyones eating today- I'm grilling/smoking two whole, free range organic, $16/per farm fresh chickens..Pictures later
brandon_w wrote:Da Beef that looks amazing.
Here are some things I've made recently:
Butter-fried cheesecurd, cheeseburger, peppers, onions and garlic omelete:
Chicken that I put in a brine for 24 hours, then grilled whole "brick" style, with BBQ sauce. Butter browned oyster mushrooms, foil packet potatoes, grilled onions and peppers:
Ribs with a "tex-mex" styled rub and sauce out of Paul Kirk's book. The flavors of the rub and sauce were great. However I don't know a lot about grilling ribs, and this was my first time trying it. Did a direct grill method because I did not have time for low and slow. The meat was a bit chewy and dry. More practice is needed: